Physical AI is moving from screens into factories, warehouses and homes — and Neura Robotics just raised the capital to build the infrastructure that makes it possible.
Neura Robotics GmbH, a German pioneer in cognitive robotics, said Wednesday it has raised up to $1.4 billion in a Series C round backed by Nvidia, Amazon, Qualcomm Technologies, Tether, Bosch, Schaeffler and the European Investment Bank, among others. The round ranks among the largest ever in robotics and values the Metzingen-based company at between $8 billion and $15 billion, according to an industry expert familiar with the terms.
"The future of AI will not only live on screens," David Reger, founder and chief executive officer of Neura Robotics, said. "It will move, interact, learn and work beside us in the real world. We believe physical AI and cognitive robotics will become one of the largest technology shifts of the coming decades."
Neura is building what it calls the Neuraverse, an open ecosystem where robots share skills and real-world learning across deployments. Unlike traditional robotics companies focused on isolated machines or narrow industrial automation, Neura combines robotics, AI, sensors, edge computing and large-scale learning infrastructure into a single platform. The company's existing orderbook and deployment pipeline already exceed $1 billion, it said.
The funding will accelerate global deployment of cognitive robots and humanoids, expand the Neuraverse platform, and scale a network of Neura Gyms — large-scale training environments that combine real-world sensor interaction, simulation and multimodal learning pipelines. Neura aims to scale production to several million robots by 2030, with manufacturing infrastructure in Germany and India.
A European challenger to Silicon Valley's AI dominance
Neura's investor lineup reads like a who's who of the AI and industrial economy. Nvidia brings its GPU computing stack for training and inference. Amazon contributes cloud infrastructure through AWS, including Bedrock and SageMaker, plus its custom Trainium chips. Qualcomm supplies edge AI processors for on-device decision-making. Bosch and Schaeffler bring decades of manufacturing expertise and sensor technology.
"Many believed globally relevant AI infrastructure companies could only emerge from Silicon Valley," Reger said. "We believe the next generation of AI leaders can emerge anywhere in the world where there is enough vision, engineering talent and execution speed."
The involvement of Tether, the company behind the USDT stablecoin, adds a distinctive element. Paolo Ardoino, Tether's CEO, said autonomous machines need the ability to process information locally, make decisions and transact without centralized intermediaries — a vision that aligns with Neura's decentralized AI architecture.
Nakul Duggal, executive vice president at Qualcomm Technologies, said robotics represents one of the most demanding edge AI use cases, where systems must perceive, reason and act instantly and reliably on device. "By combining our leading edge AI capabilities, high-performance computing and connectivity with Neura's Neuraverse platform, we are helping accelerate the deployment of intelligent machines," he said.
What physical AI means for investors
Neura's product lineup spans the full robotics spectrum: MAIRA collaborative arms for manufacturing, LARA light robot arms, MAV autonomous mobile robots, MiPA mobile manipulators for logistics and household use, and the 4NE1 humanoid robot. The company also sells SenseKit, a sensor package for third-party integrators.
The company's partnership with Bosch, announced in January, involves several thousand workers across Bosch's 350 global facilities wearing sensor suits to gather training data for Neura's robots. A separate partnership with Dassault Systèmes, announced in April, aims to close the sim-to-real gap — the challenge of making robots trained in simulation perform reliably in the physical world.
For investors, the round signals that physical AI infrastructure is becoming a distinct investment category, separate from cloud AI and autonomous driving. Nvidia's participation is particularly notable: the chipmaker has been positioning its hardware as the compute backbone for embodied AI, and Neura represents a large-scale deployment partner. Amazon's backing suggests potential integration with the company's logistics and warehouse automation operations, where robotics spending is accelerating.
Neura faces competition from US-based Agility Robotics, Figure AI and Tesla's Optimus program, as well as Chinese players like UBTech and Fourier Intelligence. But Reger argues that Neura's open-platform approach — the Neuraverse — gives it an advantage over closed, proprietary systems. "At the end, this is not only about robotics," he said. "It is about building technologies the world will depend on."
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.